Updated March 11, 2024 at 1:26 PM ET
In Minnesota, a lack of cold this winter. Ice cover on the Great Lakes in February. on ski trails in Vermont. Texas saw , driven by heat and low humidity.
The lower 48 states just in 130 years of record-keeping, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Temperatures were more than 5 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than average.
than any other season in most of the U.S. As humans add heat-trapping gasses to the atmosphere, the coldest places and coldest temperatures are being affected the most, having profound implications for food and water supplies.
From December to February, the biggest temperature effects were in the Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and Northeast. In February, Alaska was 5.5 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than average. It was also the , according to the European Union climate agency Copernicus.
The continuing warm temperatures come on the heels of a record year in 2023. Scientists found it was , driven by both human-caused warming and a strong. During El Niño years, large amounts of heat stored in the ocean are released and circulated around the planet, causing hotter temperatures and shifts in weather patterns, like flooding in some locations and droughts in others.
While warmer winter temperatures may sound like a welcome change to some, the impacts can be far-reaching. Mosquitoes can appear earlier in the spring, increasing the chances they'll spread vector-borne diseases like dengue. Many crops, like fruit and nut trees, every winter, known as "chill hours." Without that, they produce less during the summer months.
In the Western U.S., snowpack is shrinking, . States from Colorado to California depend on the slow melt of mountain snow during the spring and summer to feed the rivers they rely on. More precipitation is falling as rain instead of snow, increasing the risk of flooding the winter as rivers get overwhelmed.
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